Top LSAT scorers tend to have:
-brute dedication to obsessive studying and pattern identification
-genius / raw talent
-"luck"
-taking comfort and pleasure in reading
Specific strategies tend to vary from person to person. However, mastering time management, pacing, and endurance are all necessary. It's not just enough to be able to get the questions right - you've got to be able to do it comfortably within the time allotted.
Absorbing what I call the "LSAT Mindset" is incredibly important. Learning to see the exam from the test-makers' perspective. Dissecting the exam bit by bit. Not just by question-type - imagine if you could analyze it by stimulus type - the underlying method of reasoning.
Imagine what the test-makers would be able to do - imagine what a 175+ scorer would be able to do. And then bring your prep up to that level.
It might involve writing your own exam questions. Or spotting flaws in all the fake LSAT questions you see floating around or in the prep books on Amazon that have poor reviews for this very reason.
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